scholarly journals Maser Theory of Pulsar Radiation

1971 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 414-428
Author(s):  
Hong-Yee Chiu

In this paper we present an account of a theory of pulsar radio emission. The emission mechanism is via a maser amplification process. This theory avoids the difficulty of coherent plasma emission, that the bandwidth of radiation must be less than 1/2 λ. The high brightness radio temperature and the insensitivity of pulsar radio flux to pulsar periods can be easily accounted for.

The high brightness temperature of pulsar radiation requires that the emission process be coherent. There are three possibilities in principle: emission by bunches; reactive instability, due to an intrinsically growing wave mode; and kinetic instability, which is maser action. The emission may be direct or indirect, depending on whether the radiation can escape to infinity through the pulsar magnetosphere, or must first be converted into another wave mode. Early models favoured either direct curvature emission by bunches or indirect emission due to a reactive beam instability, but before about 1980 it was realized that there are serious problems with both mechanisms. There are strong physical arguments against emission by bunches being viable, and the first detailed analysis suggested that the seemingly plausible alternative of maser curvature emission is impossible. Also the growth rates for beam instabilities were found too small to allow waves to grow effectively. Alternative emission mechanisms, including cyclotron and linear acceleration emissions, and variants on the existing mechanisms have been considered. In this paper the suggested emission mechanisms are reviewed from a plasma-physical viewpoint, and they are then compared to see how they might fit into a phenomenological model for pulsar radio emission.


1992 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
pp. 343-346
Author(s):  
Valentín Boriakoff

AbstractThe properties of pulsar radio pulse microstructure are reviewed, then consideration is given on how, in the frame of the Ruderman-Sutherland pulsar model, an emission mechanism can be devised which explains many of the known characteristics of micropulses and of subpulses.


1992 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
pp. 319-321
Author(s):  
Yu. A. Rylov

Bunch curvature emission is one of the well known pulsar radio emission mechanisms. The problem of bunch formation is very important for understanding the pulsar radio emission mechanism. In the axisymmetric pulsar magnetospheric bunching arises in the outflow channel as a result of interaction between moving electrons (DP) and captured ones (SP) (Rylov 1988). A numerical simulation was undertaken to determine how strongly the electron flow is bunched. The bunching appears to be very strong. It can be treated as a gas of electron bunches rather than small fluctuations of the electron flow. The thermal radio emission of the electron-bunch gas has a very high brightness temperature and sharp directivity. The power consumed in electron-bunch gas heating is sufficient to explain the pulsar radio emission. The pulsar radio emission mechanism appears to be thermal (the electron bunches move chaotically) and coherent (electrons of the bunch emit coherently) at the same time. For this reason the radio emission mechanism is very stable.


1992 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
pp. 305-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. B. Melrose

AbstractCoherent emission mechanisms may be classified as (i) maser mechanisms, attributed to negative absorption by resonant particles in a resistive instability, (ii) a reactive or hydrodynamic instability, or (iii) to emission by bunches. Known coherent emission mechanisms in radio astronomy are plasma emission in solar radio bursts, maser emission in OH and other molecular line sources, electron-cyclotron maser emission from the planets, and pulsar emission. Pulsar radio emission is the brightest of all known coherent emission, and its brightness temperature is close to the maximum conceivable in terms of energy efficiency. Three possible pulsar radio emission mechanisms warrant serious consideration in polar cap models; here these are called coherent curvature emission, relativistic plasma emission, and free electron maser emission, respectively.1.Coherent curvature emission is attributed to emission by bunches. There is a fundamental weakness in existing theoretical treatments which do not allow for any velocity dispersion of the particles. There is no satisfactory mechanism for the formation of the required bunches, and were such bunches to form they would quickly lose their ability to emit coherently due to the curvature of the field lines.2.Relativistic plasma emission is a multistage emission process involving the generation of plasma turbulence and the partial conversion of this turbulence into escaping radiation. In pulsars the dispersion characteristics of the relativistic electron-positron plasma determines the form of the turbulence, which may be in either longitudinal waves or Alfvèn-like waves. Various instabilities have been suggested to produce turbulence, and a streaming instability is one possibility. Alternatively, in a detailed model proposed by Beskin et al. (1988) the instability depends intrinsically on the curvature of the field lines, and in a theory discussed by Kazbegi et al. (1988), a cyclotron instability generates the turbulence relatively far from the neutron star.3.Free electron maser emission or linear acceleration emission requires an oscillating electric field, postulated to be due to a large amplitude electrostatic wave. A recent analysis of this mechanism (Rowe 1992) shows that it allows emission in two different regimes that provide a possible basis for the interpretation of core and conal emission in pulsars. Effective maser emission seems to require Lorentz factors smaller than other constraints allow.Other suggested theories for the emission mechanism include one that arises from a loophole in the proof that curvature absorption cannot be negative, and another that involves a closed “electrosphere” in which the radio emission is attributed to emission by bunches formed as a result of pair production due to a primary charge accelerated towards the star by its Coulomb field.


1996 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 147-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Estelle Asseo

AbstractThe mechanism for the generation of pulsar radio emission has not yet been identified. Several coherent emission processes, linked to the motion of relativistic particles in the extremely strong pulsar magnetic field, have been proposed as possible candidates. Essential improvements, based on fundamental concepts of plasma physics, prove that collective plasma effects can provide the necessary degree of coherence. Progress in the 1990s, which is reported here, relates to curvature maser emission processes and relativistic plasma emission mechanisms.


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